luni, 12 decembrie 2016

Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010)

Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010) comes for me from the list of 25 films to see (no one talks about) from Taste of Cinema. Caught up also with
Alois Nebel and Attila Marcel -though they have nothing in common it has the ring of a nice Pair :).

but this I wanted to see because the director, Panos
Cosmatos is the son of one of the names of directors I knew as a child, italo-greek
George Pan Cosmatos, the late director of
Cassandra Crossing, Escape from Athens, and allegedly stand-in /ghost director
for guild credits reasons in Cobra, Rambo and Tombstone.
And this is Panos' debut, and it's inspired, as he says from his blurry memories of imagining watching films *that he was not allowed to*like 2001-A Space Odyssey, THX 1138, Altered States, Scanners, on VHS as a child. Images, feelings, more than normal narrative, cryptic storytelling in the Freudian way.
BtBR is dedicated to his mother, Birgitta Ljungberd, who was a surrealist sculptor.
The film is set in an alternative 1983, in Arboria, a a medical experimental facility where Elena (Eva Bourne) is kept prisoner by doctor Nyle (Michael Rodgers). The flashbacks of the foundation of the Institute go back into 1966 and deep into the drug culture gone wrong.

I can see traces of this going also into the hit series of the years, Stranger Things.

this poster it's a bit tricky...

So, Beyond the BR is a one-of-a kind film, psychotronic, hypnotic, etheric, spellbinding, trippy, with the rhythm of a dreamscape /nightmare, and it brings in structures and triangle and prism shaped neons, from, well, The Neon Demon.

"Like some kind of wicked mix of Beyond the Black Rainbow and
Suspiria with a dash of Elle Fanning."

The soundtrack, score and sound design. definetly could be
an influence on Refn, even the sound of Drive. Its high time late seventies and 80’s analog synth with shades of Carpenter (again ?), and trippy electronica of Popol Vuh, Tangerine Dream, -another influence of the director is Michael Mann's The Keep).

The music is by Jeremy Schmidt as Sinoia Caves, with an SSQ end track, Anonymous, and a splash of Angel Dust from... Venom !

A third act more explicit, logical and with a spped up narrative, ends with a dry finale, almost like a joke, and a final quote from Buckaroo Banzai (which is a classic and an old-all time favorite of mine), "No
matter where you go…There you are”
Overlong at 1h50, but fascinating, one-of-a kind opus, that remains with you long after you saw it, with a better vine actually than during the screening.
3 1/2 out of Five, 7 out of TEN.
A great radiography of the film as a neo-retro piece can be watched here: